City-owned dump trucks, garbage trucks among hundreds of vehicles caught speeding in Toronto, documents show
CTV
Toronto city councillors say they’re going to ask for answers after a CTV News Toronto investigation showed pictures of hundreds of city vehicles, including dump trucks and garbage trucks, speeding through neighbourhoods.
Councillor Denzil Minnan-Wong says he plans on putting forward a motion asking what city staff are doing to stop the practice, detailed in upwards of 300 tickets issues by automated speed enforcement cameras and red light cameras — and whether city staff are facing the same punishment as any other driver.
“Our own city employees have heavy feet and are speeding,” Minnan-Wong said in an interview Monday. “I think it’s really important we have a discussion about city vehicles and our own staff. If we can’t get our own employees to follow the laws, how can we get the public to do the same thing?”
Councillor Jennifer McKelvie said through a staff member she “is planning to ask some questions related to both the infractions and collections of funds.”
The councillors were responding to a CTV News Toronto investigation that obtained, through a freedom of information request, 326 tickets issued by automated enforcement machines over the first year of the machines’ operation, starting July 1, 2020.